Tuesday, July 29, 2014

David Rovics on tunnels, past and present

Over 1,100 Palestinians killed, overwhelmingly women,
children and the elderly. Several dozen Israelis killed, almost all of them
soldiers. Killed by people coming out of tunnels. Tunnels that the soldiers are
bombing and blowing up…

In my mind I keep coming back to the tunnels. Tunnels are
such a powerful image, with so much history. The Vietnamese won the war against
the US invaders partially through the widespread use of tunnels. Of course Kissinger
would complain incessantly of Soviet aid to the Vietnamese guerrillas being the
problem. That sounds much better than admitting that you're facing a very
poorly-armed enemy that's beating you through sheer determination, ingenuity
and courage, despite all your weapons of mass destruction.

The public line was the Vietminh was a small part of the
population that needed to be dealt with. That if they could just destroy their
infrastructure, the invaders would win. Secretly the American leadership knew
this wasn't true. They knew their enemy was the people of Vietnam, and they
prosecuted their war with this in mind, targeting broadly all of the civilians
of that poor country, and their neighbors as well.

But destroy the infrastructure – they did that, too. And
what was that infrastructure? Planes, helicopters, tanks? No. Rocket launchers?
A few. Antiquated rifles? A few more.

Tunnels. Mostly tunnels. And courageous, desperate refugees.
Refugees living in a walled-off ghetto, subject to an almost complete embargo,
with no electricity, overflowing sewers, very little food, who are being
incessantly bombed.

When facing a determined opponent, “infrastructure” or the
“infrastructure of terror” has a very different meaning than how the term is
usually understood.

The infrastructure, the Israelis now admit, is not the
ineffective, home-made rockets. Not the paltry collection of guns. The
infrastructure are the homes that people live in. Especially the ones around
Gaza's inland perimeter, which the IDF is now annexing with tanks and
bulldozers. The infrastructure is the homes, and the tunnels beneath them.

The thing about fighting a determined enemy in an urban
setting is you can only make the best use of your superior firepower if there
aren't any buildings in the way. People can hide behind buildings. So you have
to destroy them all, which is what the Israelis are doing. Which is what the US
did in Fallujah, and in Hue, and is what the Nazis did in Warsaw.

I'm no military expert or anything, but I am a history buff,
and I believe the main difference between Fallujah, Hue and the Warsaw Ghetto
is in Fallujah the resistance didn't build tunnels prior to the battle. In all
those cases, though, the only way to win the battle was to completely demolish
the cities, one building at a time.

In Warsaw, after the buildings were all burned to the ground
and the ghetto was nothing but rubble, the resistance continued, albeit on a
small scale due in part to a complete lack of food or firearms. The reason any
resistance was able to continue was down to the tunnels.

Tunnels are a bit like buildings that way. You can hide
behind a building, and if you're really lucky, you can ambush soldiers when
they come around the corner. If you're really, really lucky as well as very
skillful, you might get close enough for hand-to-hand combat. Which is
necessary when the other side has all the firepower.

You can also hide in tunnels, before you come out and engage
in your mission to attack the enemy before the enemy inevitably kills you in
return. It's almost always a suicide mission. You show yourself, you die, but
maybe you kill first, if you're ready to die, and very lucky and very skilled.

In Warsaw, the tunnels were how some of the ancestors of
some of those IDF soldiers survived the Nazi Holocaust. The tunnels were how
they managed to get some food into the ghetto from outside the ghetto walls.
And even a few guns, and very home-made bombs. Beneath any well-stocked kitchen
sink are the explosives necessary to have your own little “infrastructure of
terror,” after all. Even in Warsaw, 1943. If you went outside the ghetto, where
such chemicals could be purchased.

So, destroy the buildings, destroy the tunnels, and face the
conundrum that as long as people are able to buy food, fertilizer, gasoline,
and Draino, they'll be able to make explosives. As long as there are people
there will be terrorists.

So “gas the Arabs” becomes the natural conclusion. It's the
only way to have security. If you don't want to give them sovereignty, you have
to kill them all. How close to “kill them all” are the Israelis willing to go?

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Palestine Solidarity national demonstration

Demonstration called by: Stop the War Coalition, Palestine Solidarity Campaign, CND, Friends of Al Aqsa, British Muslim Initiative, Muslim Association of Britain. Supported by War on Want, Islamic Forum of Europe and Palestinian Forum in Britain.

Saturday, July 05, 2014

Remembering Paul Foot - writer and revolutionary

Ten years after his death, investigative journalist Paul Foot will be remembered at a special memorial meeting next Saturday.
Foot
was a tireless fighter against injustice, winning several awards for
his campaigning journalism on behalf of people who had been wrongly
jailed.
A lifelong socialist, as well as editing Socialist Worker for a period, Foot spent 14 years writing an investigative column at the Daily Mirror, enjoyed three lengthy stints at Private Eye and in the final years of his life also wrote a column for The Guardian.
He died in July 2004 of a heart attack, aged 66, and is buried in London's Highgate cemetery, quite close to the tomb of Karl Marx and next to Chris Harman.
The
speakers at the memorial meeting will be four people he admired and who
admired him in turn. They are journalist John Pilger, civil liberties
campaigner Darcus Howe, lawyer Gareth Pierce and Matt Foot, one of Paul's sons, who is also a lawyer.
The
meeting is part of the five-day Marxism Festival organised by the
Socialist Workers Party. It takes place on Saturday 12 July at Logan
Hall, Institute of Education, starting at 3.45pm.
Tickets are £10 (£5 if unwaged), and should be booked in advance here: marxismfestival.org.uk/booking/details

International Socialism # 143 out now

Issue 143 appears as the official celebrations of the outbreak of the First
World War reach their peak. Megan Trudell traces the process through which, in
both the academy and the larger political establishment, class antagonism has
been written out of the history of this slaughter. Paul Blackledge shows how
the differences over political strategy that had been developing in the
international socialist movement before 1914 crystallised thanks to the war
into the great division between revolutionaries and reformists.

Andy Jones analyses UKIP's breakthrough in the European elections against the
background of an increasingly toxic mainstream debate on immigration. Alex
Callinicos discusses the complexities of the radical left, Donny Gluckstein
looks at classical Marxism's response to reformism and John Rose recalls the
tangled political struggles in Ukraine in the aftermath of the October
Revolution.

Analysis examines the situation in Iraq, the political upheaval in Scotland
with the forthcoming independence referendum and the complexities of Venezuela
a year after the death of Hugo Chávez.

Anne Alexander reviews two important Marxist studies of the Arab revolutions
and Tomáš Tengely-Evans takes on Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First
Century. Other books reviewed this quarter concern George Orwell, genocide,
women and war, anti-fascism, early learning, education in China, social media
and the redoubtable black activist Darcus Howe.

If you don't subscribe to the journal and would like to you can do so at
www.isj.org.uk or contact us at isj@swp.org.uk or 0207 819 1177.
You can also get the latest issue plus various back issues at
the Marxism 2014 festival
www.marxismfestival.org.uk

The first strike in space

Marxist sci-fi fans might be interested in SF Forward, an attractively designed blog which has varied and erudite discussions of all manner of material relating to science fiction and utopianism - recent posts for example include discussions of JG Ballard and William Gibson, 'Structures of Soviet Science Fiction', 'Red Star Gazing and the Inevitability of Full Space Communism' and even a discussion of the first strike in space.